Silence : The Phenomenon and Its Ontological Significance / / Bernard P. Dauenhauer.

Silence, as poets and thinkers in every age have realized, is not the mere absence of something else. It is a complex, positive phenomenon that occurs in language, in music, and in mime. Bernard P. Dauenhauer offers an original, comprehensive, and explicitly phenomenological analysis of silence in a...

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Place / Publishing House:Bloomington : : Indiana University Press,, 1980.
©1980.
Year of Publication:1980
Language:English
Series:Studies in phenomenology and existential philosophy
Physical Description:1 online resource (1 online resource ix, 213 pages.)
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Summary:Silence, as poets and thinkers in every age have realized, is not the mere absence of something else. It is a complex, positive phenomenon that occurs in language, in music, and in mime. Bernard P. Dauenhauer offers an original, comprehensive, and explicitly phenomenological analysis of silence in all its aspects. In the first part of the study the author describes the various kinds of silence, explores the relationship of silence to different types of discourse (political, artistic, moral, religious, and technological), and presents an intentional analysis, delimiting the essential characteristics of silence. Testing his insights against the thought of other philosophers who have considered the meaning of silence—notably Heidegger, Hegel, Husserl, Sartre, Derrida. and Merleau-Ponty—Dauenhauer, in the second part of the book, constructs an ontological interpretation of the significance of silence. The synthesis that emerges demonstrates the complexity of silence and its important role in a broadly conceived philosophy of language.
ISBN:025305124X
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Bernard P. Dauenhauer.